United States Marine Corps Forces, Pacific

Marine Forces Pacific
MARFORPAC insignia
Active 31 July 1992 – present
Country United States of America
Branch United States Marine Corps
Size 84,000 Marines and sailors
Part of United States Indo-Pacific Command
Garrison/HQ Camp H. M. Smith
Motto(s) "In Any Clime and Place!"
Colors Marine Corps Colors
Commanders
Commander LtGen William M. Jurney
Deputy Commander BrigGen Daniel L. Shipley
Sergeant Major SgtMaj Eric D. Cook

The U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Pacific (MARFORPAC) is the Marine Corps service component command of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command. It is the largest field command in the Marine Corps and is headquartered at Camp H. M. Smith in Hawaii. The MARFORPAC area of responsibility covers more than half of the earth's surface.

It is composed of the I Marine Expeditionary Force (I MEF) and the III Marine Expeditionary Force (III MEF). Each MEF comprises a command element (CE), a ground combat element (GCE) (1st and 3rd Marine Divisions), an aviation combat element (ACE) (1st and 3rd Marine Aircraft Wings), and a logistics combat element (LCE) (1st and 3rd Marine Logistics Groups).

History

Although the U.S. Marine Corps has had units stationed in the Pacific region since World War II, Marine Corps Forces Pacific (MARFORPAC) was not established as a service component of Pacific Command until 31 July 1992. The Commander, Marine Forces Pacific, is dual-hatted as Commanding General, Fleet Marine Force Pacific, a position that existed since 1944. General Holland Smith, the first commander of Fleet Marine Force Pacific, established its headquarters in the summer of 1944 to lead over 500,000 Marines in the theater that were subordinated to the U.S. Pacific Fleet.

After its creation in 1992, MARFORPAC was initially one of only two Marine service component commands, along with Marine Corps Forces Atlantic. During the 1990s MARFORPAC commanded two-thirds of the combat units in the Marine Corps, totaling to over 80,000 Marines, and was responsible for providing forces to not only Pacific Command, but also to Central Command and the United States Forces Korea. Accordingly, the Commander of MARFORPAC was also the Commander of Marine Corps Forces Central Command (MARCENT) from the 1990s until it became a completely separate headquarters in 2005. In 2002, then-commander of Marine Forces Pacific, Earl B. Hailston, temporarily moved from Hawaii to the Arab states of the Persian Gulf to oversee operations in the Middle East. The expansion of MARCENT during the War on Terror led to it being made a free standing headquarters under Central Command. Even after the removal of MARCENT from its area of responsibility, MARFORPAC remains the largest field command in the Marine Corps. A subordinate command for Marines in South Korea (Marine Corps Forces Korea or MARFORK) was also created in 1995, answering to MARFORPAC and U.S. Forces Korea.

Mission

As the assigned service component to United States Indo-Pacific Command area of responsibility, Marine Forces Pacific is responsible for the support, planning, and provision of forces in the INDOPACOM AOR or elsewhere as required and may be designated as an executive agent for standing responsibilities or named operations. Longstanding missions for MARFORPAC include building partner capacity in support of regional cooperation and capacity-building efforts, as well as the defense of South Korea (via subordinate command MARFORK) and Japan. Marine Forces Pacific also provided combat units to support Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.

Organization

Marine Corps Forces Pacific consists of I Marine Expeditionary Force (I MEF) and III Marine Expeditionary Force (III MEF). According to the Commandant's Planning Guidance from 2019, I MEF will be designed to provide support to the U.S. Third Fleet while III MEF will provide support to the U.S. Seventh Fleet. U.S. Marines in South Korea have their own subordinate command, Marine Corps Forces Korea, that also answers to MARFORPAC, though it has no combat units assigned to it.

List of commanders

No. Commander Term Ref
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
Commander MARFORPAC / Commander MARCENT / Commanding General FMFPAC
1
Hank Stackpole
Lieutenant General
Hank Stackpole
(1935–2020)
31 July 1992 22 July 1994 1 year, 356 days
2
Charles Krulak
Lieutenant General
Charles Krulak
(born 1942)
22 July 1994 15 June 1995 342 days
3
Jefferson D. Howell
Lieutenant General
Jefferson D. Howell
29 September 1995
Acting: 15 June 1995
7 May 1998 2 years, 220 days
4
Carlton W. Fulford Jr.
Lieutenant General
Carlton W. Fulford Jr.
(born 1944)
7 May 1998 22 June 1999 1 year, 46 days
5
Frank Libutti
Lieutenant General
Frank Libutti
(born 1945)
22 June 1999 16 August 2001 2 years, 55 days
6
Earl B. Hailston
Lieutenant General
Earl B. Hailston
(born 1947)
16 August 2001 1 August 2003 1 year, 350 days
7
Wallace C. Gregson
Lieutenant General
Wallace C. Gregson
(born 1946)
1 August 2003 5 August 2005 2 years, 4 days
Commander MARFORPAC / Commanding General FMFPAC
8
John F. Goodman
Lieutenant General
John F. Goodman
(born 1945)
5 August 2005 22 August 2008 3 years, 17 days
9
Keith J. Stalder
Lieutenant General
Keith J. Stalder
23 August 2008 2 September 2010 2 years, 10 days
10
Duane D. Thiessen
Lieutenant General
Duane D. Thiessen
(born 1951)
2 September 2010 2 August 2012 ~1 year, 335 days
11
Terry G. Robling
Lieutenant General
Terry G. Robling
2 August 2012 15 August 2014 2 years, 13 days
12
John A. Toolan
Lieutenant General
John A. Toolan
(born 1954)
15 August 2014 26 August 2016 2 years, 11 days
13
David H. Berger
Lieutenant General
David H. Berger
(born 1959)
26 August 2016 8 August 2018 1 year, 347 days
14
Lewis A. Craparotta
Lieutenant General
Lewis A. Craparotta
(born 1960)
8 August 2018 16 July 2020 1 year, 343 days
15
Steven R. Rudder
Lieutenant General
Steven R. Rudder
(born c. 1962)
16 July 2020 7 September 2022 2 years, 53 days
16
William M. Jurney
Lieutenant General
William M. Jurney
7 September 2022 Incumbent 1 year, 112 days

See also